Last modified: 2005-01-22 by ivan sache
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from Shipmate, with permission
Former Air Force flag
The flag of the Belgian Air Force was adopted on 25 (fide
Pedersen [ped70]) or 26 (fide
Barraclough) April 1950. Pedersen doesn't give the yellow
fimbriation around the roundel.
Carr (1956) [car56] says
that the flag, adopted on 26 April 1950, has proportions 2:3, the
roundel 2/3 of the height, with a yellow border. In the upper hoist a
pair of stylized yellow wings charged with a shield ensigned with a
crown of the same colour.
In 1953 the proportions became 3:5, the roundel approximatively 1/2
of the height, the shield black with a narrow red border and charged
with a yellow lion rampant.
Mark Sensen, 7 June 1998
The flag of the Belgian Air Force was adopted on 4 February 1948 and the yellow fimbriation was removed in 1955. I do not know anything about a relation between the British and Belgian Air Force blue shades. That particular blue shade is common in several Air Force ensigns.
Michel Lupant, 16 December 2000
According to Carr (1956) [car56], the Belgian section of the Royal Air Force used the RAF flag, but with the British roundel replaced by the Belgian roundel.
Mark Sensen, 7 June 1998
This was also in the 1953 edition [car53], repeated in the 1971 Barraclough edition but left out of the 1981 Barraclough/Crampton edition [bcr81]. I asked the former General Secretary of the Flag Institute about this, since he used to be in the RAF. His opinion was that this was probably an unofficial flag, but that similar ensigns might have been made by some of the other nationalities that formed RAF squadrons. The four Czechoslovak Squadrons and the four Norwegian Squadrons were RAF squadrons with RAF style squadron badges, but the Polish squadrons flew with the RAF as Polish Squadrons and retained their Polish badges.
David Prothero, 8 June 199